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cliff – The David Thuis Blog

This Last Weekend

imageWow What a weekend!  We traveled some 680 miles and saw a lot of great sites.  Here’s just a little recap if you’re interested.

Friday, 24 September 2010

My son has no school today so he had a sleepover last night.  Not much work there.

3:45 pm – Head out the door enroot to Longmont, CO for my Brother In Laws Birthday Celebration at the Eagle’s Grill. O.K. Food and Cold beer.  Joe Cool was playing, we’ve seen them before and they never disappoint. We stayed a bit longer than expected, but it’s hard to leave when you are having a great time.

Full Gallery here

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Saturday, 25 September 2010

Up way to early, 5:00am, and it’s off the Guernsey, WY. for a visit with Troop 199, Colorado Springs to work on the Longs Peak Council’s Old West Trails Award on the Oregon Trail Ruts.  We took a short hike, which left me wanting a bit more, but it was still pretty interesting.

Full Gallery Here

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Second stop of the day was just a few miles up the road to the Register Cliff.  I was really looking forward to this stop.  I can’t tell you how many times I was just up the road training with the Air Force at Camp Guernsey or patrolling around the “old” F.E. Warren Missile Complex and never made it to this site.I was a bit disappointed that so many recent visitors had decided to scroll their name into the rock next to and on top of the old signatures, but it was still interesting none the less.

Full Gallery Here

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Last planned stop was another 12 miles or so to the Ft Laramie Historic Site.  This was my favorite stop of the day.  Not only because it Public Lands Day and the admission was free to the park, but as someone who live at F.E. Warren AFB (Formally Fort D.A. Russell)  for seven years you could really picture how parts of the base had changed very little since the beginning.

Full Gallery Here

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After we finished at Ft Laramie, my son wanted to see some missile silos, so I decided to take the “scenic” ride home and rather than go North-West on US Route 26 to I-25, we headed South-East.  A short stop in Lingle, WY for cold drinks and a half a tank of gas, we then headed into Torrington, WY., where we began heading South on U.S. Route 85 towards Cheyenne, and into the missile fields of F.E. Warren. 

NOTE: I wasn’t aware that between 2002 and 2005 the AF had decommissioned all the Peacekeeper missiles and all the sites we were looking at were “mothballed”, otherwise I would have stopped and took a few pictures.  But at the time I thought they were still active and I didn’t really want to answer any question from AF Security forces so all the viewing was done from the road.

The first site we saw “well” was Sierra-2, right outside of Torrington, and my son couldn’t have been happier.  We drove for awhile and we didn’t see many more sites (not a lot on that stretch of 85), my son started asking about getting some Chugwater Chili.  My original plan of stopping in Chugwater , WY had been scrapped for this new route home, but I can’t say no to my son, so even though it added 20 minutes to our drive we diverted West onto Wyoming Highway 313 (which is in pretty bad shape).  We went past sites Sierra-7, (this was my first indication that maybe the missiles had been decommissioned as the weeds were pretty overgrown, turns out this was the first site “closed “ in 2002) Romeo-2, (site sign missing) and even past the Master Alert Facility R-1 (no vehicles, no U.S. flag flying (another indication this area might be “closed”)). 

After a short stop in Chugwater, WY for some delicious Chugwater Chili from Horton’s Corner we headed South on I-25 to F.E. Warren where we got some more cold drinks, topped off the tank with gas.  We then headed home, where we were met by my mother–in-law and father-in-law, who decided to make a last minute trip to visit us and join us in out planned Sunday activities.

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Since we moved to Colorado Springs in 2003 we’ve made an annual trip to Pueblo, CO for the annual Chile & Frijoles Festival, and even though this weekend was packed full of activities we weren’t going to let that stop our “new” family tradition.  So it was up early on Sunday, and off to the festival we went.  Joined this year with my Mother-in-Law and Father-in-Law in tow and later with our friends the Waller’s with a couple of their friends from Pueblo made this year one of the best we’ve attended.

Full Gallery Here

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Moms and Back to School

Another great e-mail I had to share, applies to dads as well as moms.

Photo by Rupert GanzerMisconception Number 1: Moms miss their kids when they go back to school

Seriously. I’ve had enough of you by now. Every morning with the “what are we going to do today, Mom?” is finally over. I’ve had looked at your face twenty-four seven for the last 77 days. It’s time to go learn something. No more asking me about the pool, when is the next snack or if you can stay up late and watch a movie. It’s over….You’re going back to Hogwarts and I get to have a life again. There is a Christmas morning for parents and it’s called “back to school”.

Misconception Number 2: Moms like to go school shopping.

Are you freaking kidding me? Why do I pay taxes?…so I can rack up a 200 dollar bill at Staples for crap that we have laying around my house in junk drawers. Why does it have to be new pencils? What’s wrong with the chewed up, broken strawberry shortcake pencils sitting in the bottom of the toy box for the last 6 months? And how many subject books can you possibly need? What happened to reading, writing and arithmetic. If they added a couple of things for parents to that list I wouldn’t mind so much….why not pencils, erasers and vodka …..or some Nyquil.

Misconception Number 3: Moms like back to school night.

Why must we do this every year? I got it already. You’re the teacher…I’m the parent. My kid is either going to be smart or dumb. If he gets a certain number or colored dot on his discipline chart, he can’t get a prize from the prize box. Pretty simple stuff. Listen, I’m pretty old school. If he doesn’t listen to you…you can throw something at him. I don’t care. But I got a lot of work to do at home and I’m paying a babysitter right now. Plus, I’m pretty sure you are going to assign some project on wigwams made by some Indian tribe I’ve never heard of, so I need to get home and start my research. So, I got it. We’re all here for the betterment of the kids. Blah Blah Blah. Can I leave now?

Misconception Number 4: Moms like school paperwork.

How many trees are you planning on killing to tell me the same stuff I had to pay a babysitter to listen to the other night? You know our name, where we live and our emergency phone numbers. He doesn’t have a nickname….call him “stinkbutt” for all I care. We don’t have any “special circumstances” that you need to know about. He lives in a home with two parents who may or may not like each other at any given time and they will fight. If that qualifies as a reason he can’t get his homework done on time then he won’t be able to function as an adult and have a real job so you may want to “educate” him on that life lesson.

Misconception Number 5: Moms like covering books in that annoying sticky paper.

What exactly will you be doing with these books that I have to cover them in a plastic laminate? Do you often teach in the rain? Or while the children are drinking soda and eating soup? Do you know how long that takes? Has any parent in the history of education been able to do it without any air bubbles in it? From now on I’m covering it the old way…brown paper bags. That way I can cover the books and pack their lunches at that same time. Who says moms can’t multitask?

PS. Please tell my son if he can’t find his lunch to look in his science book.

Misconception Number 6: Moms like helping you with your homework.

What? I am scared out of my mind. I’m pretty sure that I forgot everything I learned in fifth grade by the time I was in sixth grade. I have no idea what you are talking about most days. I don’t really know my 12 times tables, I read the cliff notes to all your summer reading and I don’t know how to conjugate anything but I do know that song “conjunction junction what’s your function” if that helps at all. And please don’t even say the words “new math” to me. What the heck was wrong the old one?

Misconception Number 7: Moms can’t wait to pack your lunch every day until we die.

I hate doing laundry. Making dinner every night is the bane of my existence, so making your lunch every day for an entire year, in terms of “mom fun”, lies somewhere between brushing plaque off the dogs teeth and scheduling my annual pap smear. Listen, as a child I hated what my mom packed me for lunch. But, like every kid before me, and every generation to come you will find a kid to trade with…I’m sure someone likes sardines.

Misconception Number 8: Moms love after school activities.

I don’t know who made up this idea of organized clubs and sports but they should be the ones in charge of carting your ass around. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not against all after school programs. I just wish they would offer it during hours that would work best for me so that dinner wasn’t at 8:30 at night followed by 4 hours of homework. Why not do it on the weekends and call it “after-hours activities” so mommy and daddy could actually go out one night and pretend that we have a life of our own. Don’t worry about us though I’m sure that me and “what’s his name” will be married a very long time.

Misconception Number 9: Moms don’t mind taking you to school if you miss the bus

Your bus comes at 7:10 am….which means that you should be standing by the door at 7:05 am. Not eating breakfast , chasing the dog around the house or in the bathroom, asking me to check your homework while I’m taking a shower. Get it together! I don’t like running down the street in my jammies at 7:12 screaming “Please wait” or “If you stop I’ll show you my boobies.”

Misconception Number 10: Moms cry on your first day of school

We do cry but they are tears of joy. I have done my job. I have successfully kept a human child alive for at least 5 years without doing any major

damage. Motherhood is the hardest job in the world!! Sure, doctors save lives and CEO’s run million dollar businesses but…you teach a kid not to poop their pants and then you can say you’ve made the world a better place.”